Israeli air strikes hit Gaza after bloody border protests

Published 4 months ago on 14 July 2018

Palestinians react to tear gas fired by Israeli troops during a protest at the Israel-Gaza border in the southern Gaza Strip July 13, 2018. — Reuters pic

GAZA CITY, Palestinian Territories, July 14 — Israel’s army said it had launched air strikes targeting Hamas in the Gaza Strip early today, following border clashes that saw a Palestinian teenager shot dead and many injured including an Israeli soldier.

The Israeli aerial bombardment came as rockets and mortars were lobbed into southern Israel from the blockaded Palestinian enclave.

The health ministry in the Hamas-run Strip said that 220 Palestinians were injured in yesterday’s protests on the Gaza border in addition to 15-year-old Othman Rami Halles who was shot dead.

Israeli fighter jets struck two “Hamas terror tunnels” one in southern Gaza and one in the north as well as other infrastructure across the coastal territory, Israel’s military said in statements posted on Twitter.

It said targets included “complexes used to prepare arson terror attacks and a Hamas terror training facility”.

According to witnesses in Gaza, there were no casualties from the air strikes, which damaged Hamas military infrastructure.

The army said the strikes were conducted “in response to the terror acts instigated during the violent riots that took place along the security fence” yesterday.

It also cited “continuous arson attacks damaging Israeli territory on a daily basis with the launching of arson balloons from the Gaza Strip into Israeli territory”.

During the strikes, militants in Gaza fired a total of 31 mortar rounds at Israel, the army said, adding that six were intercepted by its Iron Dome air defence system.

Israeli media reports said no one was injured in those attacks.

Hamas spokesman Fawzi Barhoum said the group was responsible for the mortar fire on Israel and that they were carried out “in response to the Israeli air strikes”.

“The protection and the defence of our people is a national duty and a strategic choice,” Barhoum said.

Grenades and flaming tyres

Palestinians in Gaza have for months been demonstrating against Israel’s decade-long blockade of the territory and in support of their right to return to lands they fled or were driven from during the war surrounding the creation of Israel in 1948.

Since the protests and clashes broke out along the border on March 30, at least 140 Palestinians have been killed by Israeli fire.

The majority were involved in protests and clashes but others were seeking to breach or damage the border fence.

No Israelis have been killed.

Israel’s army said grenades, Molotov cocktails, flaming tyres and stones have been hurled in the direction of its soldiers, one of whom was injured by a grenade.

Israel says its use of live fire is necessary to defend its borders and stop infiltrations.

It accuses Gaza’s Islamist rulers Hamas of seeking to use the protests as cover for attacks against Israel.

Hamas has run Gaza since seizing it from the Palestinian Authority amid deadly clashes in 2007.

Since then, Israel has maintained a crippling blockade on Gaza which it argues is necessary to isolate Hamas.